Our great dog Titan (Ch.Logres’ Titanium) was only bred once.

Argen is his only intact son. Argen is a beautiful, square, sound, moderately angulated dog, with a strong, firm, level back, terrific coupling, great bone and substance… and a stunningly correct Doberman head – which is a wedge from any angle – all in a powerful male package. Argen’s pedigree is extraordinary – top and bottom. We feel that Argen is a good choice for long, low, weak-backed, over-angulated bitches.

Below is video of Argen in the ring in Ocala, Florida on January 20, 2013.

You can freeze this video anywhere you like, at ANY point, in ANY stride, any frame. Argen never drops his croup, never shows a gay tail, and never ever ever shows a weak, dippy topline. Every step – in every frame – shows beautiful, correct, balanced movement, with the firm strong topline that is mandated by the Doberman Breed Standard.

There are probably hundreds of thousands of Dobermans in the world, including those in the show ring. Of all of these Dobermans, there are very very few Dobermans left in the world than can move correctly – the way Argen does. In recent years Doberman breeders have sacrificed correct movement in favor of chasing an overdone front assembly. Our show rings are now full of out-of-balance, over-angulated dogs, with weak toplines, poor coupling, steep croups and gay tails. It’s true that these kinds of dogs make a nice profile when forced into shape by a strong handler. But these “handler’s creations” utterly fall apart when they take their first step. Their tails are set on too high (at at 12:00 rather than 2:00), the topline is hunched or dippy, and they are so overangulated behind, they move like German Sheppards.

Argen moves correctly because he is balanced and built correctly.

Below is video of Argen with Elaine, taken on December 3, 2012.

These are Argen’s puppies, out of our Warkant daughter Logres’ Hotline

Please note, we do not breed to sell puppies. Our interest is producing outstanding Dobermans for the next generation and beyond. We breed very few litters, and closely follow the lives of every dog we breed, throughout their life. We spare no expense with respect to the health, care and conditioning of our dogs, and seek homes with experience, who understand the unique characteristics of the Doberman. We especially value those who understand why breeding quality dogs on a selective basis is important for the future of the breed. This is NOT a profitable enterprise. If you are a first time Doberman owner, looking for a pet that you can spay or neuter at six months of age, we most likely do not have a dog for you. If you want an intact animal to use in a "breeding enterprise" that you have designed, we will NEVER have the dog for you.